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Other findings from the report include: - The Arctic Ocean continued to warm and freshen due to ice melt. This was accompanied by an "unprecedented" rate of sea level rise of nearly 0.1 inch per year. - Warming has continued around Greenland in 2007 resulting in a record amount of ice melt. The Greenland ice sheet lost 24 cubic miles of ice, making it the largest single contributor to global sea level rise. - Reindeer herds that had been increasing since the 1970s are now showing signs of leveling off or beginning to decline. - Goose populations are increasing as they expand their range within the Arctic. - Data on marine mammals is limited but they seem to have mixed trends. They are adapted to life in a region that is at least seasonally ice-covered. There is concern about the small numbers of polar bears in some regions, the status of many walrus groups is unknown, some whales are increasing and others declining. "This is a very complicated system and we are still working diligently to sort out its mysteries," said Richter-Menge. In addition to Richter-Menge, Overland and Box, lead authors of the report included Michael Simpkin of NOAA, Silver Spring, Md., and Vladimir E. Romanovsky of the Geophysical Institute, Fairbanks, Alaska. ___ On the Net: Arctic Report Card:
http://www.arctic.noaa.gov/reportcard/index.html
[Associated
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